Abstract

Abstract. Poor air quality is currently responsible for large impacts on human health across the world. In addition, the air pollutants ozone (O3) and particulate matter less than 2.5 µm in diameter (PM2.5) are also radiatively active in the atmosphere and can influence Earth's climate. It is important to understand the effect of air quality and climate mitigation measures over the historical period and in different future scenarios to ascertain any impacts from air pollutants on both climate and human health. The Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) presents an opportunity to analyse the change in air pollutants simulated by the current generation of climate and Earth system models that include a representation of chemistry and aerosols (particulate matter). The shared socio-economic pathways (SSPs) used within CMIP6 encompass a wide range of trajectories in precursor emissions and climate change, allowing for an improved analysis of future changes to air pollutants. Firstly, we conduct an evaluation of the available CMIP6 models against surface observations of O3 and PM2.5. CMIP6 models consistently overestimate observed surface O3 concentrations across most regions and in most seasons by up to 16 ppb, with a large diversity in simulated values over Northern Hemisphere continental regions. Conversely, observed surface PM2.5 concentrations are consistently underestimated in CMIP6 models by up to 10 µg m−3, particularly for the Northern Hemisphere winter months, with the largest model diversity near natural emission source regions. The biases in CMIP6 models when compared to observations of O3 and PM2.5 are similar to those found in previous studies. Over the historical period (1850–2014) large increases in both surface O3 and PM2.5 are simulated by the CMIP6 models across all regions, particularly over the mid to late 20th century, when anthropogenic emissions increase markedly. Large regional historical changes are simulated for both pollutants across East and South Asia with an annual mean increase of up to 40 ppb for O3 and 12 µg m−3 for PM2.5. In future scenarios containing strong air quality and climate mitigation measures (ssp126), annual mean concentrations of air pollutants are substantially reduced across all regions by up to 15 ppb for O3 and 12 µg m−3 for PM2.5. However, for scenarios that encompass weak action on mitigating climate and reducing air pollutant emissions (ssp370), annual mean increases in both surface O3 (up 10 ppb) and PM2.5 (up to 8 µg m−3) are simulated across most regions, although, for regions like North America and Europe small reductions in PM2.5 are simulated due to the regional reduction in precursor emissions in this scenario. A comparison of simulated regional changes in both surface O3 and PM2.5 from individual CMIP6 models highlights important regional differences due to the simulated interaction of aerosols, chemistry, climate and natural emission sources within models. The projection of regional air pollutant concentrations from the latest climate and Earth system models used within CMIP6 shows that the particular future trajectory of climate and air quality mitigation measures could have important consequences for regional air quality, human health and near-term climate. Differences between individual models emphasise the importance of understanding how future Earth system feedbacks influence natural emission sources, e.g. response of biogenic emissions under climate change.

Highlights

  • Air pollutants are important atmospheric constituents as they have large impacts on human health (Lelieveld et al, 2015), damage ecosystems (Fowler et al, 2009) and can influence climate through changes in the Earth’s radiative balance (Boucher et al, 2013; Myhre et al, 2013)

  • Larger differences between Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) models are shown in the DJF mean historical changes over Northern Hemisphere regions than what occurred in JJA (Fig. S16), reflecting the differences shown in the model evaluation (Fig. 4) and the strong seasonality of the changes

  • In this study we have provided an initial analysis of the historical and future changes in air pollutants (O3 and PM2.5) from the latest generation of Earth system and climate models that have submitted results from experiments conducted as part of CMIP6

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Air pollutants are important atmospheric constituents as they have large impacts on human health (Lelieveld et al, 2015), damage ecosystems (Fowler et al, 2009) and can influence climate through changes in the Earth’s radiative balance (Boucher et al, 2013; Myhre et al, 2013). Strong climate and air pollutant mitigation measures in SSP1 were shown to reduce global annual mean surface O3 concentrations by more than 3.5 ppb, whereas for SSP3 O3 concentrations over Asia were predicted to increase by 6 ppb (Turnock et al, 2019). These studies highlighted the potential large regional variability in the response of air pollutants to the different assumptions in the future pathways and the need for a full model assessment using the current generation of Earth system models (ESMs) that take into account both changes in emissions and climate. A comparison is made of individual CMIP6 models for a single future scenario (ssp370) to identify potential reasons for model discrepancies

Air pollutant emissions
CMIP6 simulations
Surface observations
Surface ozone
Ground-based observations
MERRA reanalysis product
Air pollutants from present day to 2100
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call